I'm afraid Kung Fu Master is the one that gets to me the most (one of my favourite arcade games) I remember playing it on my friends C64 and being blown away, then rushing out to my local WHSmiths, getting home and loading it up, utter garbage I was not a happy boy. Even today I would love to see someone do a Speccy remake just to heal the pain.
I forked out £8 for Double Dragon on the Speccy having fallen in love with the arcade version. I remember playing it for about an hour and thinking "ah well, at least it came in a nice box". I was back to Codemasters' budget titles for a while after that chastening experience!
Renegade and Target Renegade were very much the "It games" of a couple of summers for my friends and I. They were to us back then what Fortnite and Minecraft are to kids today.
I remember playing Renegade in the Arcades and being battered by Big Bertha and her ladies of the night. I swore I would get revenge and couldn't wait to play the original. The spectrum artwork still ranks highly on nostalgic value for me. Target Renegade was probably my best experience on the humble speccy. Good times.
Back in '86 we had an Atari at home, and one day my brother told that a mate of his had a Spectrum 128k, and if I wanted to have a try on it. The game we played was Target Renegade, and I remember being blown away by the graphics, music, playability and most of all, being able to say "I got an extra life". My brother's mate had to put up with me for months, inviting myself over to his place, both of us knowing that I was there not for friendship but for the game only. Like you wrote, good times!
Having grown up in Australia with a Nes I'm fascinated by the spectrum, It really seems like the little engine that could. Love the work Kim, keep crushing it and Merry Christmas.
Here’s something that will amaze you: Sir Clive Sinclair, who created the Spectrum, never envisaged it as a games machine, yet it had absolutely loads of games programmed for it, some of which became classics in their own right. He saw it as being an affordable colour-capable business machine for the home.
I had the Amstrad CPC 464 which got a lot of Spectrum ports being a very similar operating system. It did offer far more colours though when Devs used it properly such as the amazing Sorcery game.
The 48k Spectrum that I got as a child was bought to get me interested in computers. It got hammered as a games machine but equally I ended up getting a degree in Computing and wound up fascinated in all things computers. It really was an amazing little machine.
NES version of Kunio kun was great too. It absolutely holds up. As in, I didn't play original but had a blast with it in 2010s. Controls are absolutely tighter than many modern games.
Target: Renegade is supposed to be set in America, but it's so very British in a lot of places. Particularly the end level in what looks like an old London pub, complete with "Geezer" bouncers and what looks like optics behind the bar. So much charm.
I really liked Renegade back in the day, but I absolutely LOVED Target Renegade! Playing 2 player Co-op was the best arcade like experience on the Speccy. Played the hell out of that thing from a pirated cassette copy... Ahh the 80's.
The Renegade franchise has got to be one of the most convoluted in all of video games. The original was changed substantially between it's Japanese and international releases, the ports of the international releases got sequels of their own (as chronicled here,) and then the original developers made a spiritual successor in Double Dragon, which has its own complicated legacy. Then, when they made a proper sequel to the original, it was again given an overhaul internationally (becoming River City Ransom) that was completely unrelated to the international version of Renegade, and that overhaul eventually got a sequel of its own in River City Ransom: Underground. Then there were all the sports spinoffs, many of which were again divorced from the main series in their localizations, and eventually we got River City: Tokyo Rumble, which uses the name of one of the western releases but follows the original Japanese continuity. And then most recently we got River City Girls, which again uses the western title but the Japanese continuity, but is made by a western developer this time.
What the first two games on the Spectrum got right was scale and style. The sprites fit so well with the levels, that while both being detailed do not interfere with each other, there's so much play space. A true masterclass in Spectrum game design.
I loved this game sooo much! I remember beating it multiple times on 48K and when I got the 128K version being amazed at the music and extra boss screen. Kim, you are brilliant!
As always, well researched and presented clearly. I found out some stuff about the games I didn't know, even though they were a huge part of my childhood growing up. Thanks for all the hard work it takes to make the video.
I remember when i first discovered Target Renegade on some C64 pirate compilation cassette that a friend gave me. I was so much in love, i couldn't believe that such a good beat em up was possible on C64: great graphics, smooth action, violence, great tune...it was like an arcade game dream come true.
I agree, “Target: Renegade” should have been when Ocean stopped. They went to the well one time too many. Then came “River City Ransom”, “River City Ransom: Underground” and finally “River City Girls” with the second “RCG” chapter coming in 2022.
Target Renegade was one of the few games I could finish back in the day on the Spectrum. Renegade 1 was harder for me, but I loved Target, finished it every time by the end of the era. You cannot throw enemies in Target like you could in Renegade 1.
Target Renegade and Renegade were stunning for the time. Dawn Drake had amazing vision with 8 bit sprite design on these games. Both were brilliantly playable and so addictive!
Great video of a classic game that so many of us enjoyed. It showed if the programmers worked to the system strengths u could get some fantastic titles
Hey mate, thanks for the excellent high quality content you always provide. Seasons greetings from a fan in Australia. I played Renegade on the Amstrad CPC 464 and thought at the time it was pretty cool. I preordered the Amiga 500 mini so I am hoping that turns out to be excellent. Have a very Happy Christmas and New Year to all.
Games like Target Renegade are just further proof that it's not the power of the machine that matters, but how it's used. It doesn't get much humbler in terms of horsepower than the ZX Spectrum, but look at all the quality games for it!
Double Dragon and Bubble Bobble were two of my favourite speccy games when I was a kid. But they always get panned. I loved them. Fab video Kim, thanks! Renegade is a stone cold classic; of that there is no doubt.
I agree with the Spectrum port of Double Dragon being a load of rubbish, but Bubble Bobble was/is a bona fide classic on virtually every system it has been ported to. I've never heard anybody say anything different.
Firebird done a brilliant job on all the home computer versions of Bubble Bobble when they came out back in the day. The Spectrum version was awesome and the Amstrad one was good too (if a lil bit slow).
First off another brilliant documentary Kim. Renegade on the speccy to me is the best version even over the arcade. Target Renegade is the best game on the speccy for me. Again the speccy is the best version by a mile. Still haven't beaten it as Mr Big just kills me everytime. Still play both games on an emulator from Time to time. Getting a Spectrum Next so Target Renegade will be the first game I'll be firing up on it.
As a kid games didn't seem cheap. My mum's new catalogue turned up. I looked through the game titles and for reasons I can't say I picked upcoming title renegade for my spectrum. That way I got to pay in instalments. When it finally turned up I fell in love with it. Played it endlessly for months and my friends loved it too. Then one got a 138k machine and suddenly we had music and a new move, the throw. Didn't play the arcade version until years later and couldn't get on with the control scheme. the spectrum controls were very nuanced - there's actually 3 ways to do a flying kick. the way shown in this video, a leap in the air with your leg flicking out at the top of your leap - which stuns the enemies a bit longer and a kick one way that then reverses into the direction of your opponent. target renegade was fun but not really as good as the original and renegade 3 was a travesty - how it got a crash smash i couldn't say. i used a poster of renegade beating up the prossies to cover my school science book, the science teacher did not approve. interesting fact - the ingame music didn't work on the plus 3
A thoroughly enjoyable video Kim! The first two games are magnificent, but wished I left the third installment on the shelf! Target Renegade is my personal favourite! I find it amazing that there wasn't an Amiga or ST side scrolling beat 'em up that was better. 😲
I remember the original Renegade because I could barely load it off tape, spent ages adjusting the tape volume tiny amounts.. You had to work for your games back then. But I played the hell out of Target Renegade on the CPC, great game
😂 Yea i remember the volume thing. I was amazed when someone's big brother told me to try it whenever i couldn't get a game to load!!! God ,id go back in a heartbeat too!
The spectrum came few years before NES. For UK kids in the 80s it was the equivalent of the NES. I only played consoles when the mega drive arrived over here. Still playing on Xbox nowdays even though I'm 48 lol. O.A G.
Some of my favourite gaming memories are playing Target Renegade on the Speccy with my friends and cousins. When I 'upgraded' to the C64 and once again acquired TR, I loved the graphics but it had somehow lost the magic of the rubber keyed wonder, as well as it's 2 player mode! This is such a well made documentary. Thanks for bringing back my childhood :)
Also the old keyboard scramble on Target Renegade high score entry breaks through max characters and when you hit enter you go back to the game with infinite lives, the screen you return to is scrambled but then when you flip in the next screen its all clear again.
I was in primary school and friends would come over after class to play games on my HC91 Speccy clone. Renegade was one of the games I had on floppy, no load errors or fiddling with the cassette player! It was one of the few co-op games that I owned so we played it a lot. The funnest thing for me was in level 2 where you could line up enemies and get them shot by dodging the bullet at the last moment.
If I remember correctly, didn't the C64 version force you to use keyboard because the developers couldn't figure out a decent control scheme for attacking in two directions?
I played Renegade and Target Renegade on the C64 when I was 7 years old. An issue I had with the first game was that when playing with joystick, only the stick worked but not the fire button on the joystick. So I tried playing it with the stick on the joystick and a button on the keyboard. But I never got past the first level. The only things I remember about Target Renegade was that I always ran out of time on the first level if I tried to play it like a normal beat em up. As in walk to the right and beat ip enemies as they come along. The solution was I keep walking all the way to the far right of the screen, beat some enemies and pick ip the phone. Don't remember how far I got in thay game. Only seen Renegade 3 in a commodore format magazine. Didn't know it was that bad. I wil also add that I actually enjoyed double dragon 2 and 3 on the C64. The best version of dd3 was on C64 in my opinion. Better than arcade and NES. Haven't played other versions. I was actually able to finish them Lastly, I played a version of the original double dragon on the C64 where when you move your character to the top of the screen and when you jump over them, they freeze in place. Making the game much easier to finish. Can't remember if I finished it without taking advantage of that glitch.
An absolute classic conversion on the Speccy. Fluid and hugely playable, and a legend in the playground at the time. No one could doubt it, even the posh kids with their C64s. Target was more of the same, after that, nothing happened. Nothing. (It still hurts) Edited to add: Thanks Kim for the in-depth dive into this rather niche bit of UK 8bit gaming history, a story worth telling as it was a big deal at the time. As always, you knock it out of the park - much love x
I enjoy Renegade 1 as a single player, but I have very nice memories playing Renegade 2 in 2 players :) You were even able to hit the other player with a hammer... :)
When I was kid, I had ZX Spectrum and I always wanted NES, which I got 2 years later. My friends, however, thought that ZX Spectrum graphics are better than in NES and I charged money from them to play in my house hahaha, one pence per minute.
Favourite game on the speccy of all time. Better than the arcade version imo. Never got tired of throwing guys on the train track or high flying kicking the bikers. Take me back.
Great overview Kim. It’s hard to over emphasise what a big deal Renegade was at the time. I remember at school we used to practice the moves in the playground and Renegade was our favourite playground game- someone would get to be the hero and get to “beat up” the gang in a play fight! Needless to say this would cause a few scrapes and bruises and wasn’t encouraged by the lunch monitors
I had the C64 version of the original and my mate the ZX Spectrum. The C64 version was decent enough, but what the Speccy lacked in looking pretty, it made up for in the gameplay implementation overall. He also bought the Highlander game you mentioned. To say he wasn't happy with Ocean would be a wee bit of an understatement. Knowing now the reason the versions were all bad is hilarious in hindsight.
I think I had all the moves and patterns memorised when I was a kid. I still listen to the Target Renegade soundtrack when I feel I really need to focus on some work. A near perfect spectrum game.
Another brilliant video..i was a c64 owner and so jealous of my friends spectrum verson of target with its 2 player mode.also i loved the soundtrack on the spectrum. Its almost like a slow black metal or doom album..
There was always something very punk rock about Renegade - the first two anyway. I have great nostalgia for Target Renegade, even though it annoyed me to the point of breaking the safety screen on the front of my TV - I still have the scar, lol. Also, I always thought Mr Bigg looked like Sid The Sexist from Viz. :o)
The closest thing to a decent version of Renegade 3 was Darkman on the Gameboy which was also coded by Mike Lamb, graphics by Dawn Drake & music by Jonathan Dunn 👍
Thanks for the shout out. Renegade and Target Renegade are the cream of the crop on the ZX Spectrum 128, pure class, nothing better than those versions FACT. Target Renegade+ on the ZX (on my channel) is the true Renegade III!
Beg to differ as the Amstrad version holds it own to the Speccy versions in my view... .and it's definitely not fact as there are others that say this too.
I vaguely remember the Renegade release on 8-bit home, wasn't the Speccy version far superior to the C64 version ? unthinkable ! Amazing research and presentation in this content Kim, you the top video game historian, you should work in a video game museum be the main curator there !
I was a C64 kid and had Target Renegade (soundtrack was excellent) but was always disappointed by the two enemies on screen limitation, I was of course aware of Renegade, but not how good the Spectrum version was with loads of sprites on screen (especially as the C64 had hardware sprites - which I don’t believe that the Spectrum did). Looking at Target Renegade on the Spectrum though (via CZcams videos) it seems as though there are only three enemies on screen at once and so it would seem that the original would be more like an arcade experience with its half a dozen at once programming magic (despite the two player option)? I’m not sure if this is accurate but either way the Spectrum version of Renegade is a very impressive piece of programming.
I must agree. I also think Renegade on ZX is the best version. Even better than arcade. Target Renegade is the best on the ZX Spectrum version as well, although there was no throw hit. in the 48 version. Great games and was big inspiration for me. Renegade III is a complete failure. Someone who approved it didn't understand what Renegade was.
Mark from Retro Core (kinda) hated both Spectrum versions: Renegade and Chase HQ. I find it strange, as they are both exceptional conversions and he was born in UK... Oh well, we each have our opinions... I loved them both, though! 😁
Didn't Renegade's "belt scrolling" come directly from Mat Mania / Exciting Hour / Mania Challenge, also by Technōs? Renegade seemed heavily inspired by those games including the art style and the left/right nature of the combat. I wouldn't even be surprised if they shared some code.
"while the other 8 bit versions aren't that bad either" I always found the CPC version to be better overall. Particularly graphically with the sprites having altogether better proportions and of course colour despite being blockier (I really hated the sprites on the Spectrum version, they looked weird and lanky to me which just made their shuffling walk cycle seem even slower and more awkward) and they all look far too similar to each other (not helped by the lack of colour and the 'transparent' like look of the colour clash). I like a lot of Spectrum games but Renegade I far preferred on the CPC.
I will NEVER forget the cripplingly upsetting disappointment of buying Renegade III at full price.
I'm afraid Kung Fu Master is the one that gets to me the most (one of my favourite arcade games) I remember playing it on my friends C64 and being blown away, then rushing out to my local WHSmiths, getting home and loading it up, utter garbage I was not a happy boy.
Even today I would love to see someone do a Speccy remake just to heal the pain.
I forked out £8 for Double Dragon on the Speccy having fallen in love with the arcade version. I remember playing it for about an hour and thinking "ah well, at least it came in a nice box". I was back to Codemasters' budget titles for a while after that chastening experience!
All relative, that was either £5.99 or £10.99 depending on the shop
How many pounds was it. Where did you buy it? How old were you. Did it change you as a person?
Renegade 3? More like rubbishgade 3..
Renegade and Target Renegade were very much the "It games" of a couple of summers for my friends and I. They were to us back then what Fortnite and Minecraft are to kids today.
I remember playing Renegade in the Arcades and being battered by Big Bertha and her ladies of the night. I swore I would get revenge and couldn't wait to play the original. The spectrum artwork still ranks highly on nostalgic value for me. Target Renegade was probably my best experience on the humble speccy. Good times.
Back in '86 we had an Atari at home, and one day my brother told that a mate of his had a Spectrum 128k, and if I wanted to have a try on it. The game we played was Target Renegade, and I remember being blown away by the graphics, music, playability and most of all, being able to say "I got an extra life". My brother's mate had to put up with me for months, inviting myself over to his place, both of us knowing that I was there not for friendship but for the game only. Like you wrote, good times!
Having grown up in Australia with a Nes I'm fascinated by the spectrum, It really seems like the little engine that could. Love the work Kim, keep crushing it and Merry Christmas.
Here’s something that will amaze you: Sir Clive Sinclair, who created the Spectrum, never envisaged it as a games machine, yet it had absolutely loads of games programmed for it, some of which became classics in their own right. He saw it as being an affordable colour-capable business machine for the home.
@@Texy88 yeah fully Texy88 it's all part of why i like it. All the history that goes with it makes it all the cooler to me.
I had the Amstrad CPC 464 which got a lot of Spectrum ports being a very similar operating system. It did offer far more colours though when Devs used it properly such as the amazing Sorcery game.
The 48k Spectrum that I got as a child was bought to get me interested in computers. It got hammered as a games machine but equally I ended up getting a degree in Computing and wound up fascinated in all things computers. It really was an amazing little machine.
NES version of Kunio kun was great too. It absolutely holds up. As in, I didn't play original but had a blast with it in 2010s. Controls are absolutely tighter than many modern games.
Target: Renegade is supposed to be set in America, but it's so very British in a lot of places. Particularly the end level in what looks like an old London pub, complete with "Geezer" bouncers and what looks like optics behind the bar. So much charm.
My local on a Saturday night.
I really liked Renegade back in the day, but I absolutely LOVED Target Renegade! Playing 2 player Co-op was the best arcade like experience on the Speccy. Played the hell out of that thing from a pirated cassette copy... Ahh the 80's.
The Renegade franchise has got to be one of the most convoluted in all of video games. The original was changed substantially between it's Japanese and international releases, the ports of the international releases got sequels of their own (as chronicled here,) and then the original developers made a spiritual successor in Double Dragon, which has its own complicated legacy. Then, when they made a proper sequel to the original, it was again given an overhaul internationally (becoming River City Ransom) that was completely unrelated to the international version of Renegade, and that overhaul eventually got a sequel of its own in River City Ransom: Underground. Then there were all the sports spinoffs, many of which were again divorced from the main series in their localizations, and eventually we got River City: Tokyo Rumble, which uses the name of one of the western releases but follows the original Japanese continuity. And then most recently we got River City Girls, which again uses the western title but the Japanese continuity, but is made by a western developer this time.
great subject Kim, such a classic on the CPC as well (which is the best, actually ....clearly )
What the first two games on the Spectrum got right was scale and style. The sprites fit so well with the levels, that while both being detailed do not interfere with each other, there's so much play space. A true masterclass in Spectrum game design.
Man, Europe was like an alternate universe of video games back in the 80s compared to what we had in the US. I love learning about stuff like this.
Hey Kim, I had Renegade and Target Renegade on the spectrum 128k and I absolutely loved them. Ahh fond memories of them, a bit of a flash back.
I loved this game sooo much! I remember beating it multiple times on 48K and when I got the 128K version being amazed at the music and extra boss screen. Kim, you are brilliant!
One of the best beat em ups back in the day
How Fab! The Dulcet Tones of Kim Justice! How much I miss them😊
I enjoy the first 2, Classic beat em ups! The 3rd one kind of jumped the shark with the time travel and fighting dinosaurs!
…and the lack of a back-kick and the two-player option wouldn’t have helped either.
It didn't only jump the shark it shat all over it.
As always, well researched and presented clearly. I found out some stuff about the games I didn't know, even though they were a huge part of my childhood growing up.
Thanks for all the hard work it takes to make the video.
I remember when i first discovered Target Renegade on some C64 pirate compilation cassette that a friend gave me. I was so much in love, i couldn't believe that such a good beat em up was possible on C64: great graphics, smooth action, violence, great tune...it was like an arcade game dream come true.
I agree, “Target: Renegade” should have been when Ocean stopped. They went to the well one time too many. Then came “River City Ransom”, “River City Ransom: Underground” and finally “River City Girls” with the second “RCG” chapter coming in 2022.
Used to play Target Renegade on my Amstrad CPC-464, 1 of the best games ever.
Target Renegade was one of the few games I could finish back in the day on the Spectrum. Renegade 1 was harder for me, but I loved Target, finished it every time by the end of the era. You cannot throw enemies in Target like you could in Renegade 1.
Target Renegade and Renegade were stunning for the time. Dawn Drake had amazing vision with 8 bit sprite design on these games. Both were brilliantly playable and so addictive!
Target Renegade might just be my favourite Zx spectrum game ever. After Fantasy World Dizzy of course :)
Great video of a classic game that so many of us enjoyed. It showed if the programmers worked to the system strengths u could get some fantastic titles
I have really fond memories of the Melbourne House port of Double Dragon for the ST! I played it quite a bit with my sister when I was a kid.
Way of the exploding fist from M.H. was also an amazing game at the time.
This game was a gem. Used to play it at my friends house on his Rubber Keyed beauty in I reckon 1985ish. Maybe later.
O,P. Left right Q A. Up down space fire?
I remember watching Stuart Ashen's video on Renegade III many years ago, and yes, it is indeed disastrous. Great video, Kim!
I loved this game. Its not really known by anyone who didn't play it at the time. Great video Kim
Hey mate, thanks for the excellent high quality content you always provide. Seasons greetings from a fan in Australia. I played Renegade on the Amstrad CPC 464 and thought at the time it was pretty cool. I preordered the Amiga 500 mini so I am hoping that turns out to be excellent. Have a very Happy Christmas and New Year to all.
Games like Target Renegade are just further proof that it's not the power of the machine that matters, but how it's used. It doesn't get much humbler in terms of horsepower than the ZX Spectrum, but look at all the quality games for it!
Classic!
Keep up the good work Kim and stay safe!
Double Dragon and Bubble Bobble were two of my favourite speccy games when I was a kid. But they always get panned. I loved them. Fab video Kim, thanks! Renegade is a stone cold classic; of that there is no doubt.
I agree with the Spectrum port of Double Dragon being a load of rubbish, but Bubble Bobble was/is a bona fide classic on virtually every system it has been ported to. I've never heard anybody say anything different.
Firebird done a brilliant job on all the home computer versions of Bubble Bobble when they came out back in the day. The Spectrum version was awesome and the Amstrad one was good too (if a lil bit slow).
A wee video on manic miner,blagger and Chuckie Egg would be cool 3 of my favourite old school games
First off another brilliant documentary Kim. Renegade on the speccy to me is the best version even over the arcade. Target Renegade is the best game on the speccy for me. Again the speccy is the best version by a mile. Still haven't beaten it as Mr Big just kills me everytime. Still play both games on an emulator from Time to time. Getting a Spectrum Next so Target Renegade will be the first game I'll be firing up on it.
As always a great history and look at the Renegade series. Always such great delivery! Thanks agaain Kim!!
As a kid games didn't seem cheap. My mum's new catalogue turned up. I looked through the game titles and for reasons I can't say I picked upcoming title renegade for my spectrum. That way I got to pay in instalments. When it finally turned up I fell in love with it. Played it endlessly for months and my friends loved it too. Then one got a 138k machine and suddenly we had music and a new move, the throw. Didn't play the arcade version until years later and couldn't get on with the control scheme. the spectrum controls were very nuanced - there's actually 3 ways to do a flying kick. the way shown in this video, a leap in the air with your leg flicking out at the top of your leap - which stuns the enemies a bit longer and a kick one way that then reverses into the direction of your opponent.
target renegade was fun but not really as good as the original and renegade 3 was a travesty - how it got a crash smash i couldn't say. i used a poster of renegade beating up the prossies to cover my school science book, the science teacher did not approve. interesting fact - the ingame music didn't work on the plus 3
As a kid I played hours and hours of Target Renegade. It was a brilliant sequel to Renegade.
A thoroughly enjoyable video Kim! The first two games are magnificent, but wished I left the third installment on the shelf!
Target Renegade is my personal favourite!
I find it amazing that there wasn't an Amiga or ST side scrolling beat 'em up that was better. 😲
Remembering the great fun doing Target Renegade in 2 player
Man, I just love the style of Spectrum graphics, so colourful and weird. They look better today than they did back then in my opinion.
They have a timeless look and simplicity to them.
Ooh I was just putting this on while eating not knowing or expecting much but it instantly seems interesting! Only 5 minutes in too!
I remember the original Renegade because I could barely load it off tape, spent ages adjusting the tape volume tiny amounts.. You had to work for your games back then.
But I played the hell out of Target Renegade on the CPC, great game
😂 Yea i remember the volume thing. I was amazed when someone's big brother told me to try it whenever i couldn't get a game to load!!!
God ,id go back in a heartbeat too!
Me too!!
Yes! I had several little tippex marks on the volume knob of different settings that suited different games. 😆
@@danmoney9932 oh shit I never thought of that.. I spent ages trying to crack it like a safe :D
The only version of Renegade that I played a decent amount was the NES version. But I quickly moved on once I discovered Double Dragon.
The spectrum came few years before NES. For UK kids in the 80s it was the equivalent of the NES. I only played consoles when the mega drive arrived over here. Still playing on Xbox nowdays even though I'm 48 lol. O.A G.
The main theme from Target Renegade has been my ringtone on all of my phones for over a decade now.
Christmas has come early. Thanks Kim!
Some of my favourite gaming memories are playing Target Renegade on the Speccy with my friends and cousins. When I 'upgraded' to the C64 and once again acquired TR, I loved the graphics but it had somehow lost the magic of the rubber keyed wonder, as well as it's 2 player mode! This is such a well made documentary. Thanks for bringing back my childhood :)
Also the old keyboard scramble on Target Renegade high score entry breaks through max characters and when you hit enter you go back to the game with infinite lives, the screen you return to is scrambled but then when you flip in the next screen its all clear again.
What are your memories of the almighty Renegade and its sequels?
Target renegade was easily one of the best games I had on the Speccy +2 - I never knew there was a 3rd (almost wish I still didn't know..)
duf duf duf, nut-crunch, throw. Dufdufduf pummel pummel pummel ohhh f...
Best art work ever
I was in primary school and friends would come over after class to play games on my HC91 Speccy clone. Renegade was one of the games I had on floppy, no load errors or fiddling with the cassette player! It was one of the few co-op games that I owned so we played it a lot. The funnest thing for me was in level 2 where you could line up enemies and get them shot by dodging the bullet at the last moment.
If I remember correctly, didn't the C64 version force you to use keyboard because the developers couldn't figure out a decent control scheme for attacking in two directions?
I played Renegade and Target Renegade on the C64 when I was 7 years old. An issue I had with the first game was that when playing with joystick, only the stick worked but not the fire button on the joystick. So I tried playing it with the stick on the joystick and a button on the keyboard. But I never got past the first level.
The only things I remember about Target Renegade was that I always ran out of time on the first level if I tried to play it like a normal beat em up. As in walk to the right and beat ip enemies as they come along. The solution was I keep walking all the way to the far right of the screen, beat some enemies and pick ip the phone. Don't remember how far I got in thay game.
Only seen Renegade 3 in a commodore format magazine. Didn't know it was that bad.
I wil also add that I actually enjoyed double dragon 2 and 3 on the C64. The best version of dd3 was on C64 in my opinion. Better than arcade and NES. Haven't played other versions. I was actually able to finish them
Lastly, I played a version of the original double dragon on the C64 where when you move your character to the top of the screen and when you jump over them, they freeze in place. Making the game much easier to finish. Can't remember if I finished it without taking advantage of that glitch.
Seeing as Ocean owned a hefty lump of US Gold, you could definitely say that they released more coin-op conversions than anyone else. 🤷♂️
Speccy/Amiga/Mega Drive Kim is my favorite Kim.
Great video, Kim! Happy holidays!
An absolute classic conversion on the Speccy. Fluid and hugely playable, and a legend in the playground at the time. No one could doubt it, even the posh kids with their C64s. Target was more of the same, after that, nothing happened. Nothing. (It still hurts)
Edited to add: Thanks Kim for the in-depth dive into this rather niche bit of UK 8bit gaming history, a story worth telling as it was a big deal at the time. As always, you knock it out of the park - much love x
I enjoy Renegade 1 as a single player, but I have very nice memories playing Renegade 2 in 2 players :) You were even able to hit the other player with a hammer... :)
17:14 Aphex Twin. Used to love playing Target Renegade two player!
Renegade only loaded successfully about 5 times (out of countless attempts), for me, on the Spectrum. Heartbreaking stuff.
Remember playing Subway Vigilante on the Speccy. Really enjoyed it. Would love to play Target Renegade.
Nice bit of history i enjoyed that thanks kim. Have a great crimbo.
The box art for renegade 3 is superb
There is a W.I.P port of the Spectrum version of Renegade to the Amiga. No released code yet, but it looks promising.
Target: Renegade Deserves a Remaster.
"In a sound?....euuuuurrrrgh" - love it Kim, but the history books will have to be re-written 😉
When I was kid, I had ZX Spectrum and I always wanted NES, which I got 2 years later. My friends, however, thought that ZX Spectrum graphics are better than in NES and I charged money from them to play in my house hahaha, one pence per minute.
SOLID vid Kimster.
Favourite game on the speccy of all time. Better than the arcade version imo. Never got tired of throwing guys on the train track or high flying kicking the bikers. Take me back.
Great overview Kim. It’s hard to over emphasise what a big deal Renegade was at the time. I remember at school we used to practice the moves in the playground and Renegade was our favourite playground game- someone would get to be the hero and get to “beat up” the gang in a play fight! Needless to say this would cause a few scrapes and bruises and wasn’t encouraged by the lunch monitors
Haha same! We used to laugh "if only we had the hammer"
I loved this game growing up. Awesome retrospective Kim.
nice one! i loved the renegade series. thankfully only ever bought renegade iii on budget!
Great video, Kim. Cheers x
Great video - thank you
I had the C64 version of the original and my mate the ZX Spectrum. The C64 version was decent enough, but what the Speccy lacked in looking pretty, it made up for in the gameplay implementation overall. He also bought the Highlander game you mentioned. To say he wasn't happy with Ocean would be a wee bit of an understatement. Knowing now the reason the versions were all bad is hilarious in hindsight.
Thanks for making these videos. Keep doing that please.
As always a superb video Kim. Target Renegade is still one of my all time favourite games, Speccy version of course!
I think I had all the moves and patterns memorised when I was a kid. I still listen to the Target Renegade soundtrack when I feel I really need to focus on some work. A near perfect spectrum game.
Agreed it was a masterpiece
Target Renegade was my jam
An amazing video. Brings back so many great memories. Thanks Kim!
I used to play this game loads on my 128k. One of the best games in the collection for sure 👌
Another brilliant video..i was a c64 owner and so jealous of my friends spectrum verson of target with its 2 player mode.also i loved the soundtrack on the spectrum. Its almost like a slow black metal or doom album..
Another great vid, thanks Kim…
There was always something very punk rock about Renegade - the first two anyway. I have great nostalgia for Target Renegade, even though it annoyed me to the point of breaking the safety screen on the front of my TV - I still have the scar, lol. Also, I always thought Mr Bigg looked like Sid The Sexist from Viz. :o)
The closest thing to a decent version of Renegade 3 was Darkman on the Gameboy which was also coded by Mike Lamb, graphics by Dawn Drake & music by Jonathan Dunn 👍
Ocean always had the best box art. I'd definitely buy a book on it
Nice video. A shame the excellent Amstrad version of Target Renegade never got much attention. Arguably the better all round version.
Terrible version, nes like graphics with music all bugged, ZX was far superior for playability and C64 beat them all when it came to the music.
@@ZEUSDAZ completely disagree. Also why is NES like gfx a bad thing? Better than the ZX that’s for sure.
@@AdiSneakerFreak oh god no 🤮🤮🤮 🤣
@@ZEUSDAZ gotta disagree with this. It's brilliant on the Amstrad as well and holds its own to the Speccy version.
Thanks for the shout out.
Renegade and Target Renegade are the cream of the crop on the ZX Spectrum 128, pure class, nothing better than those versions FACT.
Target Renegade+ on the ZX (on my channel) is the true Renegade III!
Beg to differ as the Amstrad version holds it own to the Speccy versions in my view... .and it's definitely not fact as there are others that say this too.
I vaguely remember the Renegade release on 8-bit home, wasn't the Speccy version far superior to the C64 version ? unthinkable ! Amazing research and presentation in this content Kim, you the top video game historian, you should work in a video game museum be the main curator there !
Renegade III is always supercool to me… how can a beat em up where you fight dinosaurs 🦖 and mummy’s be bad!
amazing content as alway kim.
My wee self asked my parents for Double Dragon on the Speccy because I liked the arcade. Oh boy.
I was a C64 kid and had Target Renegade (soundtrack was excellent) but was always disappointed by the two enemies on screen limitation, I was of course aware of Renegade, but not how good the Spectrum version was with loads of sprites on screen (especially as the C64 had hardware sprites - which I don’t believe that the Spectrum did).
Looking at Target Renegade on the Spectrum though (via CZcams videos) it seems as though there are only three enemies on screen at once and so it would seem that the original would be more like an arcade experience with its half a dozen at once programming magic (despite the two player option)?
I’m not sure if this is accurate but either way the Spectrum version of Renegade is a very impressive piece of programming.
Renegade and target renegade are the only reason I was jealous of my mates speccy.
"he doesn't have a jump animation, he just jumps in the air"
Target Renegade loaded once on my Spectrum then never loaded again. Even after I got the game replaced at the shop.
I must agree. I also think Renegade on ZX is the best version. Even better than arcade. Target Renegade is the best on the ZX Spectrum version as well, although there was no throw hit. in the 48 version. Great games and was big inspiration for me. Renegade III is a complete failure. Someone who approved it didn't understand what Renegade was.
Love your content, brings back so much memories
Mark from Retro Core (kinda) hated both Spectrum versions: Renegade and Chase HQ. I find it strange, as they are both exceptional conversions and he was born in UK...
Oh well, we each have our opinions...
I loved them both, though! 😁
Target Renege played and looked so good on the Spectrum
I just heard that Ian Hetherington, the financial director of Imagine Software, has passed on.
Didn't Renegade's "belt scrolling" come directly from Mat Mania / Exciting Hour / Mania Challenge, also by Technōs? Renegade seemed heavily inspired by those games including the art style and the left/right nature of the combat. I wouldn't even be surprised if they shared some code.
Same company made both games.
With the likes of streets of rage 4 now on current consoles it would be AMAZING to get a current gen port of Renegade and Target Renegade.
Cool beans Kim....cool beans!
What happened to Ocean in the 90s ? It was such a powerhouse publisher for Spectrum games.
"while the other 8 bit versions aren't that bad either" I always found the CPC version to be better overall. Particularly graphically with the sprites having altogether better proportions and of course colour despite being blockier (I really hated the sprites on the Spectrum version, they looked weird and lanky to me which just made their shuffling walk cycle seem even slower and more awkward) and they all look far too similar to each other (not helped by the lack of colour and the 'transparent' like look of the colour clash). I like a lot of Spectrum games but Renegade I far preferred on the CPC.
Even though I owned the speccy version the Cpc was the best version.
Amstrad version was the best out of all the 8 bit versions for me.